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S-M-A-R-T Goals

Goals Must Be S-M-A-R-T


(Specific, Measurable, Achievable/Acceptable, Relevant/Realistic, Timely)

Specific: You should target a specific subject area, grade level, and student
population. Provide enough detail so there is no indecision as to what
exactly you should be doing when the time comes to do it. A goal of:
Study biology is poor. Should you be reading your text? If so, what
pages? Or should you be looking over your lecture notes? A much better
goal would be: Read pp. 12-35 in biology text, write questions in the
margin of text, and practice answering those questions after reading.

Measurable: You should identify the measurement instrument to be used


and the element explained must be measurable. Your goal should be such
that when you are through you have some tangible evidence of completion.
It feels good to see something in front of you indicating a job well done.
Equally important, you will be able to prove to yourself that you were
successful and your time wasnt wasted.

Achievable/Acceptable: Your goal should be set by you and by no one else.


If it is a group goal (i.e. grade-level, building) then it should be a goal
gained through consensus of the group. Assessment will best show your
strengths and weaknesses, and you can use this information to maximize
your chances of success. It should be achievable in the sense that
achievable percentage gains are expected.

Relevant/Realistic: Make sure the goal addresses a relevant subject area. Is


the goal an urgent need? Dont plan to do things if you are unlikely to
follow through. Better to plan a few comprehensive goals rather than many
things and be unsuccessful. Success breeds success. Start small with
what you can do, experience the joys of meeting your goal, and only then
gradually increase the amount of work that you ask of yourself. Setting
goals in which every minute of the school day is devoted to your goal(s) is
unrealistic; unplanned events will crop up and wreak havoc with your
schedule. Give yourself some flexibility.

Timely: What is a reasonable timeframe to accomplish your goal? Is it one


semester? Is it one academic year? Is it a two-week period of intense
study? You should be using reality or baseline data points in available.
Bottom line: Keep it real. Oftentimes, grade-level and/or building goals are
set with an unrealistic timeframe.
SMART Goals Worksheet
Answers at time of development
Specific To pass the quiz with an A
What is the desired result? (who, what,
when, why, how)

Measurable I want to pass the class with a 94 or higher


How can you quantify (numerically or
descriptively) completion? I will check on infinite campus every time we take a quiz days
How can you measure progress?
Achievable 1. Do corrections
What skills are needed? 2. Annotate Notes
What resources are necessary? 3. Read Rubric clearly
How does the environment impact goal 4. Dont add level 5 questions
achievement? 5. Study and review before each quiz and test
Does the goal require the right amount of 6. Make note cards for review and extra points
effort?
Relevant Yes
Is the goal in alignment with the overall
mission or strategy?

Time-bound The end of each quiz


What is the deadline?
Is the deadline realistic?

Final Goal:
I want to pass Biology unit 6 quizes Genetics with a 94 or higher by doing corrections, annotate notes by
circling boxing underline etc, read rubrics clearly, not adding level 5 questions, study & review before each quiz
by reading through notes and annotate the main things while studying, and make note cards by the end of unit
6 genetic.

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